Thursday 23 June 2011

Venizelos is already pissing off the Eurocrats

[Lagarde. Touche'. Watch out for the next IMF 'head']

bravo, my boy.
That's the way to barge in there.
Don't hang your head.
kick some butt
throw some of your ample weight around.
10 days to go

checkitout: euobserver.com

Greek finance minister jangles EU nerves ahead of summit

Diplomatic sources told this website that Venizelos is keen to tweak the 28 June austerity package, provoking 'frustration'

LEIGH PHILLIPS
23.06.2011 @ 11:19 CET

EUOBSERVER / BRUSSELS - As EU leaders ready themselves to gather in Brussels amid perhaps the EU's worst existential crisis, fresh details of frustration at the new Greek finance minister have emerged.

The summit was originally to focus on the issue of migration amid unrest in north Africa and the Middle East, but all eyes are on Greece and the wider eurozone crisis even though the Athens drama is not officially on the schedule.

The summit comes bang in the middle of EU-IMF-ECB inspections in Greece and efforts by the newly minted Greek government to push through a €28 billion package of austerity measures and €50 billion in public asset sell-offs.

The troika arrives in Athens on Thursday to meet with the finance minister, Evangelos Venizelos - in his job less than a week - to discuss the upcoming 28 June vote in the Greek parliament on the austerity package, and to ensure that it matches eurozone demands.

EU finance ministers, assuming they like what they see in the Greek vote, will only give the go-ahead for the dispersal of the fifth tranche of bail-out cash on 3 July, during a specially convened meeting of EU economy chiefs. [that's a lie]

.....Venizelos, a former defence minister and long a critic of the memorandum of understanding between the EU-IMF-ECB troika and Greece, went to an EU finance ministers meeting in Luxembourg on 19 June - his EU debut - with a few too many ideas of his own.

Diplomatic sources told this website that Venizelos is keen to tweak the 28 June austerity package, provoking "frustration" among colleagues.

Papandreou's recent government reshuffle was designed to bring into the cabinet almost all of the critics of the memorandum in order to co-opt enemies. But in doing so, he appears to have to put centre stage a man who is unwilling to play along.[that's right, son. deal with it]

Describing Venizelos' Luxembourg intervention, one contact, who described the meeting as "bad-tempered", said: "He talked too much about what he wants to do, too much tweaking, and not enough [about] what they are going to do."

Venizelos' deputy, Pantelis Oikonomou, is also a potential loose cannon.[now!now! we musn't have bias]

The head of the left-wing faction [gasp!] in the governing centre-left Pasok party, Oikonomou had until his absorption into the cabinet been the figurehead of an anti-troika poster campaign. The billboards reminded Greeks that Papandreou's father, Andreas Papandreou, was wont to say "Greece belongs to the Greeks."

"We remember and fight for a homeland independent and just," the poster continues, quoting Papandreou senior, the first Socialist prime minister of Greece after the fall of the rule of the military junta that ruled the country from 1967-74.

EU capitals, the IMF and the ECB are keen for the Greek government to lay aside politics and to get on with the technical job [of f%^&8king their populace] of implementing the austerity measures, at a time when Athens is fast running out of cash to run the organs of state, pay pensions and to service its gaping national debt.

the money is coming anyway

just sit tight.

the only reason there is doubt is that the Eurocrats are trying to scare Greeks
into supporting the slavery measures.
It's not gonna work.
the tv channels are not showing the swarms in Syntagma Square
anymore.

Don't you worry. It looks like the whole monetary
ball of sh*t is about to unravel,
and the Eurocrats know it.
more later

Wednesday 22 June 2011

New investments in Greece. Drug factory for depression pills to export to Europe

[11 days to go]

because you can't export true happiness.

Greece has many strengths as a society.
NO. not politics.
NO. not justice.
NO. not fairness in the economy.
NO. no future.


BUTT, we have a good life. As long as you don't expect anything too fancy, you're fine.
We enjoy family, friends, a good meal, a party, a festival.
We're not as stressed as Westerners with their superficial lives, with their ready cash.
We're more grounded. That's why Greece has excellent life expectancy and the lowest
use of anti-depressants in Europe.
The Kings of the pill-poppers? UK, France and Portugal

checkitout: (use Google translation)
ΑΝΤΙΚΑΤΑΘΛΙΠΤΙΚΑ
Στην Ελλάδα το μικρότερο ποσοστό λήψης στην Ευρώπη
Στην Ελλάδα, όπως εκτιμάται από την έρευνα του Ινστιτούτου ΙΖΑ της Βόννης και του πανεπιστημίου του Γουόργουικ, υπάρχει το μικρότερο ποσοστό λήψης αντικαταθλιπτικών σε σχέση με όλες τις υπόλοιπες ευρωπαϊκές χώρες.
Τα λιγότερα αντικαταθλιπτικά σε σχέση με τους άλλους ευρωπαίους πολίτες, καταναλώνουν οι Έλληνες, σύμφωνα με ερευνητές του Ινστιτούτου ΙΖΑ της Βόννης και του πανεπιστημίου του Γουόργουικ.
Η έρευνα αναφέρει ότι ένας μεγάλος αριθμός ευρωπαίων καταφεύγει στα αντικαταθλιπτικά φάρμακα για να αισθανθεί καλύτερα και ότι ένας στους δέκα μεσήλικες (ποσοστό 10%) και ένας στους 13 ενήλικες χρησιμοποίησε κάποιο αντικαταθλιπτικό τους προηγούμενους 12 μήνες.
Στην Ελλάδα, όμως, εκτιμάται ότι υπάρχει το μικρότερο ποσοστό λήψης αντικαταθλιπτικών σε σχέση με όλες τις υπόλοιπες ευρωπαϊκές χώρες.
Οι ερευνητές, με επικεφαλής τον Ντέιβιντ Μπλαντσφλάουερ και τον καθηγητή Άντριου Όσβαλντ, μελέτησαν ένα τυχαία επιλεγμένο δείγμα περίπου 30.000 Ευρωπαίων σε 27 χώρες. Αναλογικά, τα περισσότερα αντικαταθλιπτικά καταναλώνονται στην Πορτογαλία, ενώ πάνω από τον μέσο ευρωπαϊκό όρο βρίσκονται η Γαλλία και η Βρετανία.
Στην Ελλάδα το μικρότερο ποσοστό λήψης στην Ευρώπη
Στην μία άκρη της κατάταξης βρίσκεται η Πορτογαλία όπου το 84% δηλώνει ότι δεν έχει πάρει ποτέ αντικαταθλιπτικό, το 5% παίρνει κατά καιρούς ("όταν κάποιος αισθάνεται την ανάγκη"), το 2% τακτικά για διάστημα μικρότερο του ενός μηνός και το 9% τακτικά για διάστημα μεγαλύτερο του ενός μηνός.
Στον αντίποδα, στην Ελλάδα δεν έχει πάρει ποτέ αντικαταθλιπτικό το 97% του πληθυσμού (το μεγαλύτερο ποσοστό στην Ευρώπη), κατά καιρούς παίρνει το 1%, ενώ τακτικά για διάστημα μεγαλύτερο του ενός μηνός μόλις το 1%.
Ο Άντριου Όσβαλντ έκανε λόγο για ανησυχητική διαπίστωση. "Τα αντικαταθλιπτικά είναι σχετικά νέο προϊόν. Καθώς ζούμε στην πλουσιότερη και ασφαλέστερη εποχή στην ανθρώπινη ιστορία, ίσως πρέπει να αναρωτηθούμε γιατί ένας στους δέκα Ευρωπαίους πολίτες μέσης ηλικίας χρειάζεται ένα χάπι για να τα βγάλει πέρα με τη ζωή του. Πρόκειται για ένα τρομακτικά μεγάλο αριθμό ανθρώπων που εξαρτιούνται από μια χημική ευτυχία", επεσήμανε.
Η έρευνα βασίστηκε σε υπολογισμούς των ερευνητών με βάση στοιχεία του Ευρωβαρόμετρου της ΕΕ για την περίοδο Φεβρουάριος-Μάρτιος 2010.

Constitutional court wakes up and shits itself

It usually takes a court in Greece 4 or 5 years to come to no decision,
largely because judges get paid off.

Well, I had heard that the Mnimonio was slavery, in print,
with losses of national sovereignty, and it allows our debt
to be sent off to anybody, say the Turks.

The Constitutional Court said the Mnimonio is just fine.
So, like I said above, there's a tendency towards accepting payment.

Where's the truth?

In essence, the slavery is to begin soon, with the sell-off of nationally-owned stuff.

One way or the other, Greece will have 3 years of clusterf%&k, and then a bankruptcy.

Tuesday 21 June 2011

liquidate everything

the term 'liquidate' comes from the foreclosure business
that banks are well-known for.
This is the first time it will be used to kill off a sizeable European country.
[you never knew about Hungary or Latvia, did you?]

It didn't take long for the GR government to start caving in, at least verbally.

They've got a vote of confidence.

we have the pressure to sell off all our assets. Even the oil in the Aegean that
we've never seen.

It's a hostile take-over, if it continues. And , in the end we'll have no large
sources of national income, and thus we'll be penniless.

It sounds like the politicians are all weak. Let's see.
Maybe the EU will go broke for some other reason.
The last 2 minutes of this video talks about the hostile takeover.
It's a chat with Demetri Kofinas, who has a radio show in NY
and a blog CoveringDelta.blogspot.com.
he looks like a kid, but he knows a few things about money.

Monday 20 June 2011

12 more days to go

I know that the Greek government is corrupt, but when it comes to selling off
the country wholesale, they are simply refusing and dancing like the best of boxers.

I actually have some faith that they're delaying, not because of stupidity, but
because they actually do not want to pass the Mnimonio or sell any assets.
The Mnimonio was passed, but not with the right quorum for international
treaties.

The problem is the pressure is piling on.

Greece has 12 days to sell up some stuff, and pass the Mnimonio law properly.

Hold on to your nuts, boys. it's gonna be a rough ride.

just say 'no' to the Eurocrats.
show backbone.
You'll be national heroes.

12 days is all we ask, and then let's see what the Europeans will do.
They've already decided to make us suffer for 3 years before they let us loose.
So, stuff 'em.

Sunday 19 June 2011

a xenos understands Greece

usually, foreign journalists come to Athens to watch the theatrical violence
or they come to share their racism with the rest of the world
with the bad bad bad Greeks.
Not this guy. I know his profound work, from the Guardian.
Read this text. It's almost lyrical in its story-telling, and explanation of big themes.

checkitout:
Athens protests: Syntagma Square on frontline of European austerity protests
The area in the centre of the Greek capital is playing host to thousands of angry demonstrators
o Aditya Chakrabortty in Athens
o guardian.co.uk, Sunday 19 June 2011 21.00 BST

Syntagma Square in Athens has become the central point for Greek protests against austerity measures. Photograph: Yannis Behrakis/Reuters
Athenians used to stop off at Syntagma Square for the shopping, the shiny rows of upmarket boutiques. Now they arrive in their tens of thousands to protest. Swarming out of the metro station, they emerge into a village of tents, pamphleteers and a booming public address system.
Since 25 May, when demonstrators first converged here, this has become an open-air concert – only one where bands have been supplanted by speakers and music swapped for an angry politics. On this square just below the Greek parliament and ringed by flashy hotels, thousands sit through speech after speech. Old-time socialists, American economists just passing through, members of the crowd: they each get three minutes with the mic, and most of them use the time alternatively to slag off the politicians and to egg on their fellow protesters.
"Being here makes me feel 18 again," begins one man, his polo shirt stretched tight over his paunch, before talking about his worries about his pension.
The closer you get to the Vouli, the parliament, the more raucous it becomes. Jammed up against the railings, a crowd is clapping and chanting: "Thieves! Thieves!"
There is another mic here, and it's grabbed by a man wearing a mask of deputy prime minister Theodoros Pangalos: "My friends, we all ate together." He is quoting the socialist politician, who claimed on TV last year that everyone bore the responsibility for the squandering of public money. Pangalos may have intended his remark as the Greek equivalent of George Osborne's remark that "We're all in it together", but here they're not having it."You lying bastard!" They roar back. "You're so fat you ate the entire supermarket."
This is an odd alloy of earnestness and pantomime, to be sure, but it's something else too: Syntagma Square has become the new frontline of the battle against European austerity. And as prime minister George Papandreou battles first to keep his own job, and then to win MPs' support for the most extreme package of spending cuts, tax rises and privatisations ever faced by any developed country, what happens between this square and the parliament matters for the rest of the eurozone.
The banner wavers here know this. In the age of TV satellite vans and YouTube, they paint signs and coin slogans with half an eye on the export market. Papandreou's face is plastered over placards that congratulate him in English for being "Goldman Sachs' employee of the year". Flags jibe at the rive gauche: "The French are sleeping – they're dreaming of '68."
Most of the time, the anger is expressed sardonically. A friend shows me an app on her phone that gives updates on the latest political and industrial actions – its name translates as iStrike. But it's not hard to see how this situation might boil over.
"Are you an indignado?" I ask Nikkos Kokkalis, using the term coined by young Spanish protesters to express outrage at José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero's austerity plans, now swiped by the Greeks. "I'm a super-indignado," he almost shouts. A 29-year-old graduate who lives with his parents, Nikkos has never done a proper job – just menial tasks for a website and an internship for a TV station. "There are 300 people over there," he waves at the MPs' offices. "Most of them make decisions without asking the people."
For their part, protesters with salaries and wrinkles are fuming at the spending cuts already inflicted on them. Chryssa Michalopolou is a teacher who calculates that her annual pay has already gone down by the equivalent of one and a half months, while her living costs have shot up, thanks to rising taxes and inflation. Does she buy the government's line that it needs to trim the public sector? "After 15 years' service, I'm only on €1,200 (£1,056) a month," she says. "I didn't see any boom; I simply paid my taxes and now I am being punished."
On display here is more than a personal grievance; it also reveals a glaring truth that politicians across Europe have so far ignored. In their efforts to hammer out a second loan agreement for Greece, eurozone ministers are focusing on the differences between bond swaps and bond rollovers, the tensions between Berlin and the International Monetary Fund and the European Central Bank or how far continental banks can withstand another massive shock.
Taken for granted in these negotiations is that the Greeks (and by implication, the Irish and the Portuguese) must accept more austerity. Yet in Athens, whether on the streets or even at a policy-making level, these technical details barely figure on the agenda. It's not just that the terms are different, the entire debate is too. Here, the argument concerns how much more austerity the Greek economy, its people and even the government can take – because all three are already at breaking point.
When Greece was all but locked out of the financial markets last May, Papandreou accepted a €110bn loan from Europe and the IMF. The idea was that the money would tide the country over for a year, in which time his government would at least start sorting out its public finances. For Angela Merkel, Nicolas Sarkozy and the rest of Europe, the loan came with some pretty tight strings attached: they charged the Greeks interest well above the official eurozone rate, and set demanding budget targets for the Pasok socialist government.
Freefall
A year in, and the deal is not working. Greece has been in recession for two years and on official forecasts this will be its third. When I ask Athens University economist Yanis Varoufakis to describe the economy, he shoots back one sentence: "It's in freefall."
Sitting on the balcony of his flat behind the Acropolis, he throws out some statistics: 50,000 businesses went bankrupt last year, industrial production fell 20% and will drop another 12% this year. Unemployment has surged, so that one in six of the workforce doesn't have a job. These are the sort of figures associated with a depression, and the predictable result is that the public finances are getting worse. Greece's debt has ballooned to 153% of GDP; on Varoufakis's projections, even if ministers manage to make all their promised cuts, the government will owe three times the entire national income.
Behind these numbers lie the stories of a society in distress. One man talks about his daughter who works in the in-store restaurant of a large supermarket outside Athens; at closing time, she and her workmates have started giving out the unsold meals to the newly unemployed – the 21st-century equivalent of a soup kitchen. An employee of a local council notes that they pick up 17% less rubbish than a year ago, simply because people have cut back on food. The owner of an art gallery tells me her son has just started his first job; holding a master's in accountancy, he works six hours a day in a mobile-phone shop.
The lazy accusation to hurl at Greece is that it had a bloated public sector and so was bound to come a cropper. Not so, says Varoufakis: the country has a public sector in line with the rest of Europe (although, nearly everyone I speak to agrees, one that does not work as well), but takes in taxes some 35% below where they should be.
Wealthy Greeks have always treated the country's tax system like a church collection plate: what they give is strictly optional. This gap was covered up for as long as the Greek state could get cheap credit; then in 2008 it became glaringly obvious. The other problem covered up during the boom years was the rotting away of the industrial base. That too is now the subject of angry public discussion.
I take a tour of the shipbuilding yard in Perama, just outside Athens. Greece has the largest commercial fleet in the world, and yet Perama is utterly silent. There is a rusting hulk, abandoned a few years ago, when those who commissioned it could no longer afford to pay for it. A decade ago, this yard employed 7,000 workers – now it has around 500. There was a time when assembling small cargo vessels was seen as pedestrian work; last year, the yard was contracted to build two boats, and the jobs were fought over. A few minutes away lives Tassos Alexandris, who was laid off from Perama in 2008. The hall of his flat is decorated with needlepoint; inside are pictures of the Virgin Mary put up by his wife, Nikki. She is ill, and his 26-year-old daughter has worked for six months in her entire career. How do they make ends meet? Nikki snorts with laughter.
"The electricity connection is inside the flat; otherwise the board would have cut us off," begins Tassos. His mother-in-law lives upstairs and, while he is too ashamed to ask her for food, she allows him to raid her fridge at night. They had a small green Citroen, but couldn't afford to keep it. Now he runs a motorbike, although with no plates and no taxes. "I can't sleep at night for worry," he says. "It has affected every part of our lives: personal, sexual, the lot." How many families in this block do they think are in a similar situation? Nikki tots them up: "80%."
Tassos doesn't just support the protesters of Syntagma; he thinks they will go further. "Don't be surprised if Athens goes up in flames," the 50-year old says. "And don't be sad, either." His words initially sound melodramatic, but the anger keeps coming up. "Politicians now walk around with bodyguards," says Aris Chatzistefanou, the co-director of Debtocracy, a film about the Greek crisis that has become a sensation. He quotes a newspaper report of how restaurateurs are taking down those cheesy framed photos of dining politicians, of how one government spokesman went to dinner a few weeks ago only for the rest of the restaurant to start shouting "You are eating the blood of the people".
Political arithmetic
The anger against the austerity and the politicians imposing it is palpable; whether it will translate into political success is debatable. Papandreou may be one of the most hated men in Greece, but there is no mainstream politician who has an alternative to acting under creditor's orders. This isn't about an electorate taking on a government, either, but the impossible political arithmetic of disparate groups of Greeks on one side versus the IMF, the European Central Bank and 16 other eurozone members on the other.
Run that by the protesters of Athens, though, and even the older, more pragmatic ones have an answer. "We may lose," one grey-haired trade unionist said to me. "But what matters is how you lose."

I don't see any terrorists

What happened to our world-famous terrorists.

Were they truly terrorists or just spy plants of the Greek or foreign governments?

Where are they?
The country is going up in flames and they're not moved to defend the nation?
well, those guys are chickensh*ts. or ...

Are they playing anarchists, at a Square near you?

Are they taking their mandated police holidays?

This from news 24/7
Οι Ρώσοι για την τρομοκρατία

Σύμφωνα με το έγγραφο, "οι ρωσικές μυστικές υπηρεσίες εκτιμούν ότι η σημερινή γενιά τρομοκρατών είναι ελεγχόμενη από τις Δυτικές Υπηρεσίες".


more later

ni how, Chinese worker

kalimera sklavia

many economists and all the bankers think that wage arbitrage will force
every nation to adopt Chinese wages:
$4 000 a year
$350/month

Greece is already down to 440 Euros, and going lower.
more soon

crowd mentality

the government falls


the government passes more tax legislation:


Hail the Keiser, in Syntagma Square

we are genetically unable to balance our budget

In this video, one of the illustrious Greek Economy ministers,
probably the one who did the deal with Goldman Sachs (that Europe knew about)
to get Greece in the Eurozone,
says "we don't have the gene for organisation"
"we is a bunch o' illiterate toe rags"
speak for yourself, Minister
Jerk Off

Friday 17 June 2011

ground zero of the NWO


[if you watch it on youtube, it's in 3 parts.]
This show by Alex Jones talks to Max Keiser on the 6th floor of the Grande Bretagne Hotel, next to the Greek parliament. He went to Greece to give a speech, and happened to be watching
at the time when the
government's
agents provocateurs came out to riot.
They look like anarchists,
except that they perform
when they are asked to do so.
They were used to distract the Greeks
and the foreign news-watchers so
that the avatars had a chance to say once again
'bad Greeks' 'they must pay'.
"Now, a message from our wonderful sponsors,
Swindler Bank"

Keiser introduced two brave fellows
George Noulas and Kyriakos Tobras
who have all the documents showing how
the Greek government was giving money to bankers
and their friends, IN ORDER FOR GREECE
to go further into debt and to give
PM Pap an excuse to bring in the IMF.

Those guys didn't get much of a chance to tell their story,
but just follow maxkeiser.com
and you'll get the info.

Keiser also talked about how he met Steve Forbes
of the magazine of the same name.
He's loaded rich and went to Greece
to chat with his friends in the International Chamber of Commerce,
about how to chop up Greece and buy it for
next to nothing.

The title above is Keiser's phrase and I guess
he's right. Greece is a test case of a small, Western,
first world government that is corrupt enough
to allow bankers to swindle its own people.
In fact, PASOK is profitting from the crisis.
Fortunately, not many of them want to go down in history
as the people that sold off what remains of Greece's wealth,
nor to be the ones to sign away Greece's sovereign right to default.
Corruption is corruption, but historical mistakes
will shame their families for centuries.

The proper democrats are in Syntagma Square and calling to the gov.
They are watching the gov.
They know what's going on inside and who is pulling the strings.

[williambanzai7 from zerohedge]
This is a test of the NWO system.
If Greece falls into line, then it will tried in Ireland, Portugal and so on.
It was the same system that was tried repeatedly in the Third World,
the most famous case being Argentina (not quite Third).
So, everybody knows to follow Argentina's model
of relatively peaceful revolution.
Out in the square.
Talk. bang pots. watch. learn.

Sunday 12 June 2011

Debtocracy



This video lays the whole dirty case bare.
with English subtitles

it was crowdfunded. The director used to work for the BBC

Friday 10 June 2011

Athens' latest minaret

Meet Sultan Ali Papadoc

coming soon

Don't give up on us, Georgie

Greeks will pay your new taxes, and even some of the old ones.
Don't sell Greece off to the highest bidder. It'll be like selling
your own kids into slavery.

Wednesday 8 June 2011

debt slavery is not an exaggeration

there are a few twists to this story so stick with me.
Below is an interview with Economist from the U of Crete
Dimitris Kazakis
He's not one of those lying economists
who work for the Masters of Debt,
like Prof "I got a Nobel" Piss-aridis
who says "cut wages, help the economy"

Anyway, this is a two-hour video, and I've only watched
half of it, but it is scary when heard all at once.

Play by play:
at 10:00 The government gave away the shop.
Greece was in trouble, and needed help, but the government put on a show:
the "CDS and Spreads show".
It was used to convince the public, but it was fake, except for the money.
with this stitch-up,
government insiders probably made money on it.
Greece, "their" country, lost 20 billion
in a matter of days.
I can hardly believe it.
and, they don't know who's behind the CDS trick because the CDS market is secret, so you can’t put anybody in jail.
They operate like the Mafia speakeasy during prohibition, hiding in the basement.

at 26:00 scary stuff . The government was the first to give up its sovereignty, willingly.
The bailout deal is worse than any deal ever signed by Greece, even during occupation by the Nazis.

at 29:00 Turkey could theoretically buy parts of Greece or its army.
This is the first country to collateralise its debts. "Take the Acropolis, please"
The Bailout document says that even all their paychecks and savings can be taken
by the creditors, even money outside Greece, belonging to Greeks.

Here's the get out of slavery free ticket:
The loan bill has not gone through parliament. It’s anti-constitutional.
It’s actually being attacked in courts around Europe.

Other tidbits:
Germany owes Greece 165 billion from WW2 , conservatively speaking.
The Greek PM went to Germany and told them that Greece will become
the Pleasure Dome of Europe.
Foreigners will use our country's land to make money and party and leave us
starving. Exactly what was going on in Cuba, before Castro.

The debts are just piled up old bills with penalties. The real amount of money is actually negligible, but the final tab will never shrink and will never be paid.
PERPETUAL DEBT.
all growth goes to banks. they won't let Greece file for bankruptcy.
Therefore, the effect of a crash would not be that bad, for Greece.
The Greek economy, despite rumours can take care of itself.
The debt game has killed its future, and that debt game is a bankers' game.
A gentleman's agreement that can ruin a country.

Money is owed, but no bankster's gonna starve if he's not paid, unless they've leveraged against the money they haven't got yet. "don't count your chickens before they're hatched"

They have debts on the books that we had claimed bankrupty on. They're still paying!
1992 was the last time the Pres of National Bank of Greece mentioned the dangerous debt. He was told to shut up. Now, the debt situation has allowed the big Euro banks to lend to countries and make big fees.
So the Europeans knew what was going on in Greece, and still let Greece into the Euro.
It's a bankers club, the Euro. The plan was to take over the periphery.

The Euro (and free movement of money) was designed to put 4 times the money into the hands of private banks and suck every European economy dry and then lend it money. And the banks are still broke because they've leveraged their holdings 30 times over to buy fake derivatives. That's already happened.

Tuesday 7 June 2011

Bay of PIIGS

a far superior force meets with an unmoveable crowd.



Es guapo, no?

Sunday 5 June 2011

Strauss Kahn don't turn on the white light



This video must have brought on DSK's downfall.

The original song was Roxanne by the Police, which is about
a guy falling in love with a hooker, and wanting her to quit 'working'.
How fitting for the Greek situation.

In Greece, the whorehouses use a white light.
The whole country is now a bordello.

the Pimps are the Greek politicians.
The Johns who pay and call the shots are the IMF, ECB and the German govenment
Anschluss, baby.
the poor unfortunate corner hostesses are the Greek citizens, who work for the 'Man'
or Mensch or Homme.
well, they certainly have taken to the streets

politicians leave through the National Garden

to avoid the public. After a long day's work in the parliament,
surrounded by 20 000 protesters, they snuck out the back gate.

Wait a second. Weren't they elected by the people to represent the people?
why are they hiding?

Well, shame had struck them and they ran through the national garden which
is pitch black at night and closed, with cops showing the way.

watch out for surprises:

everything good



Pasok advertising

salute!

Thursday 2 June 2011

This little PIIGSy went to market

[and got his head cut off by the Banksters- Papandreou]
This little PIIGSY is from an ever-expanding family. The big toe is Spain.

This little PIIGSy told the IMF to F%^&K themselves

Which PIGGSY are we gonna be?

More later